THE FINAL ANSWER - 2:56:42

SANDY HOOK FULL VIDEO - 2013The real truth Documentary

If you live in the U.S.A. you MUST watch all of this long video. It will change your life!

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Sofia Smallstorm's video exposes part of the rationale for 9/11, Sandy Hook, Boston, etc., media narratives. For the terrifying big picture and what we must do, click the link in The Final Answer box above.

Google "Yamel Jager Merino" to check out the huge number of online tributes to this "heroic EMT" who sacrificed her own "life" on 911 to help "other victims" trapped in the WTC tower. It is all so ridiculous and amusing!

In the above cloying L.A. Times memorial obit "Yamel" is said to have had a sister named Vianca Jager. You can't accuse these guys of not having a sense of humor. Bianca Jagger is the former wife of The Rolling Stones lead singer, Mick Jagger.

This website virtually shouts the message that our airwaves, a natural resource, must be freed from corporate monopoly. Broadcasting entities, in addition to lobbyists (bribers), must be restrained legally from financial interaction with governments (local, state, and national). The wonderful inventions of Radio and TV are available for social and cultural interests in our lives. A new and uncorrupted representative government can surely determine necessary frequency and power distributions to minimize bandwidth interference. However, controls of broadcaster content by corporate entities and governments necessarily reduce our airwaves to that ages-old game of the few for more money and power. Commercial advertising is designed to increase their money and propaganda is designed to increase their power. Airwaves are a natural resource. They require environmental protection by us. It is our responsibility to keep this resource as uncorrupted as the air we breathe and the water we depend upon.

In 2006 America received a gift from the Russian people in sympathy for the tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001. The work of a famous Russian sculptor, this beautiful and sensitive 100-foot high work bears names of the victims of that day. Following 911 America had the compassion of the entire world. Our non-representative "leaders" turned this unprofitable sentiment around 180 degrees. We deserved better. This Russian gift deserved broad national media coverage.

Is there a more glaring example of media censorship than this? Would this news undermine half a century of "cold war" propaganda and current words such as "menace", "threat", "terror" - words designed to siphon huge sums from tax-paying Americans for payments to bankers, corporate war-contractors, and empire-building international corporations? War and conflict is more profitable than peace for certain entities. Please see these links and ask yourself why you may be learning of this for the first time:

The bankers knew how to ensure that Andrew Jackson's urging of 'eternal vigilance'
would come to nought. They would control the media. Today we are besieged by
our mainline media discussing 'the banking crisis'. Isn't it time for at least
one 'talking head" to mention these candid, historical, and brilliant comments
made by a former President of our country?

This is one of the most important videos ever produced.
A trailer for "America: From Freedom to Fascism" by the late Aaron Russo.
It provides a synopsis of the relationship between The US government's Federal Income Tax and the nation's un-Constitutional privately banker-owned Federal Reserve System. You will not learn this from mainline news, including network television. Please watch this entire video.

PROOF that network TV determined the public's selection of the current U.S. President

The Real News Network

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History of the National Security State. This in-depth documentary, with Gore Vidal, traces the history of the militarization of the US economy and the rise of a state and media structure to support it.

The Self-Serving System of Peer Review - " If the public ever figures out that it can escape the clutches of higher education in the United States, which absorbs about a third of a trillion dollars a year, the game will end."

"In ways that have become typical, the media and government worked together in this disaster. One day before the raid, the Waco Tribune-Herald started a series on "The Sinful Messiah." On the morning of February 28, 1993, before BATF arrived at Mt. Carmel, at least 11 reporters were on the scene already. After the religious community was torched, the entire media participated in the beatification of Janet Reno for her actions in Waco."Read the 1994 article -- by Rep. Ron Paul.

POLL: Over Half Of Americans Say They Do Not Trust The Press -- A new Harris Interactive poll finds that over half of Americans — 54 percent — say they tend not to trust the press, “with only 30 percent tending to trust the press.” More Americans (41 percent) trust “Internet news and information sites” than they do the mainstream media.

A new BBC documentary supports the conclusion that the CIA planned and executed
the assassination of Robert Kennedy.

It is not for lack of honest and courageous individuals who would risk their careers to speak truth to power -- a modest risk compared to those of some journalists in authoritarian countries who have been jailed or murdered for the identical "crime." But our journalists are not in control of the instruments they play. As conglomerates swallow up newspapers, magazines, publishing houses, and networks, and profit rather than product becomes the focus of corporate effort, news organizations -- particularly in television -- are folded into entertainment divisions. The "news hole" in the print media shrinks to make room for advertisements, and stories needed by informed citizens working together are pulled in favor of the latest celebrity scandals because the media moguls have decided that uncovering the inner workings of public and private power is boring and will drive viewers and readers away to greener pastures of pabulum. Good reporters and editors confront walls of resistance in trying to place serious and informative reports over which they have long labored. Media owners who should be sounding the trumpets of alarm on the battlements of democracy instead blow popular ditties through tin horns, undercutting the basis for their existence and their First Amendment rights.

HBO in this country and
Thames Television in the U.K. sponsored a
television trial called "The Trial of James Earl Ray."
The trial was prepared in 1992 and it began and was
tried in 1993, the 25th anniversary of the assassination
of Martin King.

It took the jury about seven hours after that television
trial to come back with a verdict of Not Guilty, James
Earl Ray. You probably never heard of that. Because it
was not reported anywhere and if it was it was mentioned
once or twice in a couple of media entities. It was
called "entertainment." It wasn't really serious you
see. It was a form of entertainment.

The consolidation of the control of the media is a
major problem in this democracy as it is in most
democracies today. I don't know how democracy can
function when people are not allowed information that's
essential for the decision-making process. But rather
they get propaganda continually.

"Tyrants become obvious only when looking back, after what they have done becomes known. The German people did not stand up to Hitler because their media betrayed them, just as the American media is betraying the American people by willingly, voluntarily, even proudly, abandoning its traditional role as watchdog against government abuse."

"Hitler was TIME Magazine's Man Of The Year in 1938. Stalin was TIME Magazine's Man Of The Year for 1939 and 1942. Both of these men, and many others also celebrated by the media, were unimaginable monsters. The lesson from these facts is that it isn't easy to spot a genocidal tyrant when you live with one, especially one whom the press supports and promotes."Read the entire article

Use the links to the right. Open a "Media Contacts" window. Then copy and paste
email addresses after opening the "Send emails" link beneath it. If you wish, add your own comments
about becoming independent and not being a shill for the government propaganda machine.

Holt Uncensored  A weekly email column and website about books and the book industry written by Pat Holt, former Book Review Editor and Critic for The San Francisco Chronicle. Now contains media criticism.

For those of you interested in digging deeper into the world of media criticism, we've provided thumbnail guides to some of the more well-known academic, institutional and watchdog sites:

Accuracy in Media (AIM) Accuracy In Media is a non-profit, grassroots citizens watchdog of the news media that critiques botched and bungled news stories and sets the record straight on important issues that have received slanted coverage.

American Journalism Review (AJR) is published 10 times a year by the University of Maryland School of Journalism. AJR's site contains full text versions of selected articles from the magazine and links to thousands of newspapers, magazines, and other U.S. media sites.

The Annenberg Public Policy Center, part of the Annenberg School for Communications at the University of Pennsylvania, researches media and communications policy issues. In 1998, the Center's Campaign Quality Project scrutinized political discourse with the aim of discouraging negative campaign tactics. Its site offers updates on the Center's research programs, conferences and other activities.

The Center
for Media and Democracy The nonprofit Center for Media and Democracy strengthens participatory democracy by investigating and exposing public relations spin and propaganda, and by promoting media literacy and citizen journalism, media "of, by and for the people".

Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) was founded in 1961 "to assess the performance of journalism in all its forms; to call attention to its shortcomings and strengths; to help define and redefine the standards of honest, responsible service; to help stimulate continuing improvement in the profession; and to speak out for what is right, fair and decent." It's published bimonthly by the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. Selected articles are available on their site.

Editor & Publisher is a weekly magazine covering all aspects of the North American newspaper industry. Its website, Editor & Publisher Interactive, is updated on a daily basis with news items and regular columns.

Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) argues that the "mainstream media are increasingly cozy with the economic and political powers they should be watchdogging." In response, FAIR criticizes pro-establishment media bias and media practices that they feel marginalize minority or dissenting viewpoints. FAIR's Web site offers activist alerts, stories from its bi-monthly magazine, EXTRA!, an audio-only archive of its Counterspin radio show and an archive of Norman Solomon's weekly Media Beat column including the annual P.U.-litzer awards for the year's worst journalism.

The Free Expression Policy Project The Free Expression Policy Project (FEPP), founded in 2000, provides research and advocacy on free speech, copyright, and media democracy issues. In May 2004, FEPP became part of the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law.

Free Press
Free Press is a national nonpartisan organization working to increase informed public participation in crucial media policy debates, and to generate policies that will produce a more competitive and public interest-oriented media system with a strong nonprofit and noncommercial sector.

Grade the News
Grade the News is a special project of KTEH, public television for Silicon Valley, and it is affiliated with Stanford University's Graduate Program in Journalism. It is funded by a grant from the Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation in San Francisco.

The Media Center at the American Press Institute is funded by a grant from the Robert R. McCormick Tribune Foundation with the aim of helping the newspaper industry adapt to the new technological environment created by the Internet. Its Web site offers summaries of Media Center conferences, and its Issues & Answers page provides frequently updated summaries of the top issues facing newspapers in the Information Age.

MediaChannel is a nonprofit, public interest Web site dedicated to global media issues. MediaChannel offers news, reports and commentary from its international network of media-issues organizations and publications, as well as original features from contributors and staff.
Executive editor, Danny Schechter, posts columns on the site's Web log every day, and invites everyone to get into the conversation.

The Nieman Foundation at Harvard funds fellowships for 24 journalists to pursue 10 months of independent study at Harvard University. Their site provides information about the program, plus a quarterly journal about the debates affecting the news industry.

Online Journalism Review (OJR), is published weekly by the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California. It evaluates online journalism and emphasizes the application of journalistic standards to the Internet. OJR offers a free e-mail newsletter for subscribers.

Pew Center for Civic Journalism is funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts to encourage print and broadcast news organizations to directly engage citizens "in dialogues that lead to problem solving." They provide grants to news organizations to encourage them to practice civic journalism. Their site contains studies and updates on a host of ongoing civic journalism projects, aimed at working journalists, researchers, educators and civic groups. The Center is not affiliated with the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press.

Pew Research Center for the People and the Press (formerly the Times Mirror Center for the People, the Press and Politics) is an independent group that examines public attitudes toward on the media, politics, and public policy issues. It is funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts, but is not affiliated with the Pew Center for Civic Journalism. The Pew Research Center regularly conducts national surveys measuring public attentiveness to major news stories and social and political trends. Their website provides reports and data from surveys conducted since 1996 (which you can download for free), and a library of older reports available for a moderate fee.

The Poynter Institute is a school for journalists, future journalists, and teachers of journalists. No matter what their job title may be, journalists come to Poynter in a search for excellence.

The Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ) is an initiative by journalists to clarify and raise the standards of American journalism, funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts. Their site details the PEJ's projects on local TV news and the state of the American newspaper, and hosts reports from the Committee of Concerned Journalists, a panel convened jointly with the Nieman Foundation.

If you know of additional sites to which we should link,
please contact Stewart Ogilby -- Stewart (*AT*) bigeye.com.